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Expert: Protasiewicz targeting Republican voters with attacks on … – WKOW

Conservative Supreme Court candidate Daniel Kelly consulted the Republican Party of Wisconsin in 2020, including during the time when the party was developing plans to create a fake slate of electors after the 2020 presidential election.

MADISON (WKOW) -- In late 2020, Daniel Kelly was working as an attorney, and one of his clients was the Republican Party of Wisconsin (RPW). In November 2020, Joe Biden won the popular vote in Wisconsin. One month later, RPW Chair Andrew Hitt and other Republicans gathered at the state capitol to form a fake slate of electors for President Donald Trump.

The House Select Committee investigating the January 6 insurrection subpoenaed Hitt, and he provided testimony in February 2022.

Hitt told the committee he called Kelly to talk about the fake elector plan.

"We talked for about a half-hour kind of thinking through, thinking through the issues and if, what questions, you know, what other questions do I need to ask and think through," Hitt said.

Kelly has acknowledged that work and defended the interaction during an appearance on WISN's UPFRONT on Sunday.

"Frankly, I was not versed in this area of the law," he said. "It is, the testimony shows I was not in the loop. So, it was just that one conversation, just a general conversation about the subject, and that was it."

However, Kelly's opponent, Janet Protasiewicz, has pushed the issue.

In a debate Tuesday, she called Kelly "a true threat to our democracy."

Howard Schweber, a political science professor at UW-Madison, said he believes Protasiewicz is hoping that message resonates with a specific type of voter.

He said the election is very polarized, so voters who support Protasiewicz likely won't be swayed by the attack.

"Where it does potentially have some traction is among Republican and conservative voters in Wisconsin," he said.

Schweber said, for some of them, the January 6 insurrection and election denialism were a breaking point.

"It's plausible that some number, potentially a significant number, of voters who would have otherwise voted for [Kelly] might change their mind on the grounds that 'well, I'm a conservative, you know, I'm maybe even a Trump supporter, but I don't go as far as this,'" he said.

Schweber said both candidates have run almost entirely negative campaigns, limiting the voters who they reach.

"I think both candidates have decided to abandon any attempt to persuade undecided voters and focus entirely on motivating their base and depressing the other side's base," he said.

Protasiewicz has focused heavily on Kelly's ties to the fake electoral slate. Kelly has focused on Protasiewicz's judicial record and said she is soft on crime.

However, Schweber said the efficacy of those attacks will depend on which narrative voters believe.

"I expect the next two weeks to be just a massive amplification of those messages," he said.

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Expert: Protasiewicz targeting Republican voters with attacks on ... - WKOW

Republican convention takes place in Milaca | Free … – ECM Publishers

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Republican lawmakers divided on scope of government – Wyoming Tribune

The Wyoming Legislature adjourned the 2023 general session on March 3, but its last orders of business werent put to rest until Friday, when Gov. Mark Gordon let several bills become law without his signature. That included a near-complete ban on abortion, which divided anti-abortion lawmakers over its constitutional implications. Gordon expressed similar concerns in a letter to the secretary of state explaining his decision.

I understand the Legislatures effort to improve Wyomings pro-life legal framework However, I am nonetheless concerned that, in practice, this bill would instead complicate and delay the resolution of these central and foundational constitutional questions, Gordon wrote.

The governors comments reflected a debate that simmered among lawmakers for much of the session: How best to reconcile the fundamental conservative principles of local control and constitutional adherence with a Christian nationalist agenda?

The embrace of limited government and deference to the Constitution are not new to the statehouse, where the GOP recently strengthened its longstanding supermajority. The discussion of those values and the degree to which they should dictate legislative action, however, has shifted with the growth of the Wyoming Freedom Caucus and its inclusion of an out-of-state political movement. As a result, the 2023 legislative session saw once inviolable ideals hotly debated on the House and Senate floors by competing camps of self-avowed conservatives.

Im just trying to figure out, in my mind, when we stopped believing in local control as a core principle of this body and of the majority party, Rep. Jared Olsen, R-Cheyenne, told lawmakers.

Representatives were debating House Bill 95, Working animal protection act, which would have barred municipalities from enacting any bans or restrictions on using a working animal in certain settings, such as fairs and rodeos. Debate on the bill was mostly divided by a recurring split the Freedom Caucus and its freshman allies versus the rest of the body.

Bill sponsor Rep. Rachel Rodriguez-Williams, R-Cody, said the legislation was a way for Wyoming to get ahead of the animal rights activists shed seen passing out flyers in downtown Cody urging residents not to support the local rodeo. The legislation mirrored bills states such as Arkansas and Oklahoma passed in 2021 with support of national anti-animal-rights groups The Cavalry Group and Protect the Harvest.

If animal rights activists target Cheyenne Frontier Days, Rep. Ben Hornok, R-Cheyenne, said, the city may choose to shut down its $40 million cash cow known as the Daddy of em All. Other Laramie County lawmakers were skeptical of that risk and worried about the underlying philosophy of the bill.

If we stand firm with the principle that we dont like the federal government telling our state what to do, then it should follow very logically that we dont want the state to tell our local communities what to do, Olsen said. But the concept of local control sometimes seems like a cop out, Rep. Tamara Trujillo, R-Cheyenne, said. Sometimes it just makes sense to handle it from the top.

Rodriguez-Williams also shot back. Local government is merely political subdivisions of this state, she said.

Ultimately, the bill failed to pass the House and died. But the local-control debate lingered, attracting out-of-state attention in the process.

In late February, nearing a critical bill deadline, the Freedom Caucus criticized Speaker of the House Albert Sommers, R-Pinedale, for holding back certain bills, a maneuver granted to the leadership position by the rules adopted earlier in the session.

Per those rules, Rep. Jeanette Ward, R-Casper, attempted to override the speaker, but failed to get the requisite two-thirds vote. Ward had called for the vote in an attempt to advance Senate File 117, Parental rights in education, which would have banned instruction on gender and sexual orientation from some classrooms.

About a week after Wards motion failed, national voices joined the conversation. Andrew Roth, president of the State Freedom Caucus Network, called Sommers out on Twitter for stalling three bills. Roths Washington, D.C.-based organization officially partnered with Wyomings Freedom Caucus just ahead of the session.

This is in the most Republican state in America, Roth tweeted. Shortly after, U.S. Rep. Harriet Hageman, R-Wyo., chimed in on the social media platform. This is about protecting our children. In Congress, Im fighting for these very issues. I hope the Wyoming Legislature will do the same, she said.

Later, Roth tweeted that his organization had sent text messages to Republicans in Sommers district, listing the speakers phone number and urging voters to call him. When you call yourself a Republican, but act like a liberal, you gotta pay the liberal tax, Roth wrote.

The online campaign was enough to get the attention of Fox News, but failed to influence Sommers. Im not gonna let anybody intimidate me, Sommers told reporters on the last day of the session. Following the national commotion, Sommers penned an op-ed, wherein he explained his decision to hold back legislation.

Bills that are unconstitutional, not well vetted, poorly written, duplicate bills or debates, and bills that negate local control, restrict the rights of people or risk costly litigation financed by the people of Wyoming should not become law, Sommers wrote. When it came to SF 117, local control was a specific problem.

Ive always fought against taking authority away from local school boards, town councils and county commissions, Sommers said. He also expressed concern that the bill violated the single-subject rule of the Wyoming Constitution, which requires most bills to contain not more than one subject.

Earlier in the session, adherence to the Wyoming Constitution nearly halted a sweeping abortion bill.

Ive heard the word unconstitutional thrown around so frequently this session, it baffles me, Rodriguez-Williams told a legislative committee. Honestly, I think it is being thrown around to fearmonger. And the people of Wyoming are tired of being fearmongered.

The House Judiciary Committee was debating House Bill 152, Life is a Human Right Act, a near-total abortion ban. The committee voted 5-4 to send the bill to the floor, but the vote was not totally split between anti-abortion lawmakers and those who would prefer to keep the procedure legal. Instead, Reps. Barry Crago, R-Buffalo, and Ember Oakley, R-Riverton who both work as attorneys and voted in favor of Wyomings 2022 trigger bill opposed it due to concerns over its legality.

Its difficult for me to get up and argue against a pro-life bill; its not easy, Crago said on the House floor. But Im doing it because I truly believe that going down this road is going to be detrimental to our cause of pro-life legislation.

One constitutional concern was whether the bills language stepped on the judiciarys toes by interpreting the state constitution. Oakley called the language a middle finger to that other branch of government.

As we all know, its the judiciary that interprets the law, Oakley said. Its like the civics that we all learned when we were kids. I mean, the basics of our government are, of course, that the Legislature makes the law, executive enforces and the judiciary interprets, Oakley said. Ultimately, Crago and Oakley voted for the bill on third reading.

A lawsuit filed in the Ninth District Court on Friday claims that the Legislature overstepped in passing HB 152 by violating the Wyoming Constitution. A Teton County judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking enforcement of the new law on Wednesday.

In his closing remarks to the House on the last day of session, Gordon thanked lawmakers for keeping in mind how important it is that we have Wyoming solutions for Wyoming problems.

It echoed a metric Sommers said he often relies on to assess legislation. Does it solve a Wyoming problem with a Wyoming solution? he wrote in an op-ed.

That framework, however, was opposed by Freedom Caucus members, including Rodriguez-Williams, who recently penned an op-ed calling it the go-to method for killing bills and became a facade to hide behind, conveniently concealing from Wyoming voters a true debate on the issues at hand.

The Management Council will meet today to decide what topics and solutions lawmakers will tackle in the interim, restarting the process anew.

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Republican lawmakers divided on scope of government - Wyoming Tribune

Republicans accused by New York DA of meddling in Trump hush-money case – The Guardian US

Donald Trump

Alvin Bragg writes to committee chairs seeking his testimony saying there is no legitimate basis for congressional inquiry

The Manhattan district attorney, Alvin Bragg, on Thursday accused Republicans in the US Congress of interfering in his investigation of Donald Trump over a hush money payment to the adult film star Stormy Daniels.

A letter from House Republicans demanding testimony and documents related to the investigation only came after Donald Trump created a false expectation that he would be arrested and his lawyers repeatedly urged you to intervene, Bragg wrote in a letter of his own.

Such circumstances, he said, did not represent a legitimate basis for congressional inquiry.

Bragg published his letter as it became clear another day would pass without an indictment of the former US president for offences related to the $130,000 payment made in 2016 and potentially including falsification of business records, tax fraud and/or campaign finance violations.

The grand jury considering the case is not due to meet again until Monday.

Last weekend, amid reports an indictment was imminent, Trump said he expected to be arrested on Tuesday.

That day came and went without an arrest but aides to the former president have told outlets, including the Guardian, that Trump wants to be seen in handcuffs and has even mused on how being shot while being arraigned might help him return to the White House.

Trump is under extensive legal jeopardy as he runs for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024.

An indictment is also thought likely in Georgia, over Trumps election subversion efforts there. Trump also faces federal investigations of his election subversion and his retention of classified records, a New York civil suit over his business practices and a defamation suit arising from an allegation of rape by the writer E Jean Carroll.

Trump denies all wrongdoing and claims to be the victim of political witch-hunts mounted by Black prosecutors he says are racist.

Bragg is the first Black Manhattan DA and only the fourth man to fill the post on a permanent basis since the second world war.

The payment to Stormy Daniels was made by Trumps then lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, and discovered in 2018. Cohen went to jail, in part over the payment, and turned on his former boss. But Braggs investigation of what members of his own team came to call a zombie case has never run smoothly.

Republicans in Congress have accused Bragg of acting politically while neglecting crime in his city. They have also repeatedly called him Soros-backed, a reference to donations by the progressive financier George Soros, a target for antisemitic invective on the US right.

In the Daniels case, the Republicans made their demands to Bragg on Monday.

Norm Eisen, a former White House ethics tsar now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, called the Republican letter a transparent effort to interfere with the investigation of Trump in New York, with no legitimate congressional purpose and contrary to law.

On Thursday, Bragg addressed his reply to Jim Jordan, the chair of the House judiciary committee; Bryan Steil, chair of the administration committee; and James Comer, chair of the oversight committee.

The Republican congressmen, he said, had attempted an an unprecedented inquiry into a pending local prosecution.

Claiming quintessential police powers belonging to the state of New York, Bragg accused the Republican congressmen of tread[ing] into territory very clearly reserved for the states.

He also said the Republican request would interfere with law enforcement efforts requiring confidentiality.

Nonetheless, Bragg requested a meeting with committee staffers, to understand what information the DAs office can provide that relates to a legitimate legislative interest and can be shared.

He also said he would submit a letter describing [the] use of federal funds.

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Republicans accused by New York DA of meddling in Trump hush-money case - The Guardian US

Air Force confirms 2 more Republican candidates whose records were improperly accessed – Fox News

The Air Force confirmed it provided unauthorized access to the military records of seven Republican congressional candidates in 2022.

The Air Force made the admission in a letter to House Armed Services Committee Chair Mike Rogers. R-Ala., and Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., dated Friday.

In addition to the five Republicans already known to have been affected by the breach, the Air Force confirmed the data of GOP candidates J.R. Majewski and Robert "Eli" Bremer were also accessed this brings the total number of compromised Republicans to seven.

TWO MORE REPUBLICANS IDENTIFIED AS HAVING AIR FORCE RECORDS IMPROPERLY RELEASED TO DEM-LINK RESEARCHER

Ohio Republican candidate for Congress J.R. Majewski leaves the Capitol Hill Club in Washington, D.C. (Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

"The Department of Defense failed to protect the private information of our service members," Rogers said in response to the Air Force letter. "To publicly rectify this unacceptable mistake, we hoped DoD would provide full transparency in their response unfortunately, full transparency is not what we received. We are extremely disappointed in DoDs inadequate response to our questions."

The other Republican candidates whose records were released to the Democratic Party-aligned research firm are Rep. Donald Bacon, Rep. Zachary Nunn, Kevin Dellicker, Jennifer-Ruth Green and Samuel Peters.

The firm in question is Due Diligence Group, whose Abraham Payton was named by the Air Force in letters to Peters and Dellicker as having made "multiple requests" for their records.

GOP REP LIVID AT DEMOCRAT POLITICAL DIRTY TRICKSTERS WHO OBTAINED AIR FORCE RECORDS OF REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES

"We asked Secretary Austin for information on all service members who had their records improperly released to the Democrat-aligned research firm Due Diligence Group," Rogers said. "However, DoD only provided our committees with answers from the Department of the Air Force,despite public reporting that DDG attempted to gather information from other services. DoDs response did not give us confidence that all services have put safeguards in place to ensure that service members' private information is not mishandled."

Due Diligence Group received more than $110,000 from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) from January 2021 to December 2022, according to FEC records, although it is unknown if the campaign committee used or received these or any other materials from Due Diligence.

HOUSE GOP DEMANDS ANSWER FROM PENTAGON ON LEAKED RECORDS OF JENNIFER-RUTH GREEN'S SEXUAL ASSAULT

Logo of the Department of the U.S. Air Force (AP Photo/Michael Sohn, File)

The Air Force told Fox News, "There was no evidence of political motivation or maliciousintent on the part of any employee."

"During the two-year period covered by the timeline in your letter, AFPC received a total of 19,597 requests for military personnel records. Immediately after we became aware in October 2022 of the improper records release concerning Ms. Jennifer-Ruth Green's records, AFPC conducted a Personal Identifiable Information (PII) breach investigation, as required under OMB and Department of Defense (DoD) policy."

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"AFPC also initiated a seperate audit of all third-party requests (10,599) received between early 2021 and early 2023. That audit identified a total of 11 individuals who had their military records released without proper authority."

The Air Force said their discovery came from an internal audit that began following the discovery that Republican Indiana House candidate Greens military records were improperly released. Those records, reported on by Politico in October 2022, included details of a sexual assault.

The release of Green's records led Rogers and Comer to send a letter to Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin demanding information, including a list of the improperly released records of congressional candidates over the past two years and a list of punitive actions taken against those responsible for the leak.

Fox News' Ronn Blitzer contributed to this report.

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Air Force confirms 2 more Republican candidates whose records were improperly accessed - Fox News